56 research outputs found
Multidisciplinary approach for developing a new robotic system for domiciliary assistance to elderly people
This paper aims to show the effectiveness of a
(inter / multi)disciplinary team, based on the technology
developers, elderly care organizations, and designers, in
developing the ASTRO robotic system for domiciliary
assistance to elderly people. The main issues presented in this
work concern the improvement of robot’s behavior by means of
a smart sensor network able to share information with the
robot for localization and navigation, and the design of the
robot’s appearance and functionalities by means of a
substantial analysis of users’ requirements and attitude to
robotic technology to improve acceptability and usability
Low temperature resistivity in a nearly half-metallic ferromagnet
We consider electron transport in a nearly half-metallic ferromagnet, in
which the minority spin electrons close to the band edge at the Fermi energy
are Anderson-localized due to disorder. For the case of spin-flip scattering of
the conduction electrons due to the absorption and emission of magnons, the
Boltzmann equation is exactly soluble to the linear order. From this solution
we calculate the temperature dependence of the resistivity due to single magnon
processes at sufficiently low temperature, namely , where is
the Anderson localization length and is the magnon stiffness. And depending
on the details of the minority spin density of states at the Fermi level, we
find a or scaling behavior for resistivity. Relevance to the
doped perovskite manganite systems is discussed
Observation of anomalous single-magnon scattering in half-metallic ferromagnets by chemical pressure control
Temperature variation of resistivity and specific heat have been measured for
prototypical half-metallic ferromagnets,
R_0.6Sr_0.4MnO_3, with controlling the one-electron bandwidth W. We have
found variation of the temperature scalings in the resistivity from
T^2 (R = La, and Nd) to T^3 (R = Sm), and have interpreted the $T^3-law in
terms of the anomalous single-magnon scattering (AMS) process in the
half-metallic system.Comment: To appear in Phys. Rev. Lett., 3 pages + 4 EPS figure
Bulk experimental evidence of half-metallic ferromagnetism in doped manganites
We report precise measurements and quantitative data analysis on the
low-temperature resistivity of several ferromagnetic manganite films. We
clearly show that there exists a T^{4.5} term in low-temperature resistivity,
and that this term is in quantitative agreement with the quantum theory of
two-magnon scattering for half metallic ferromagnets. Our present results
provide the first bulk experimental evidence of half-metallic ferromagnetism in
doped manganites.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Unconventional one-magnon scattering resistivity in half metals
Low-temperature resistivity of half-metals is investigated. To date it has
been discussed that the one-magnon scattering process in half-metals is
irrelevant for low-temperature resistivity, due to the fully spin-polarized
electronic structure at the ground state. If one takes into account the
non-rigid-band behavior of the minority band due to spin fluctuations at finite
temperatures, however, the unconventional one-magnon scattering process is
shown to be most relevant and gives T^3 dependence in resistivity. This
behavior may be used as a crucial test in the search for half-metallic
materials which are potentially important for applications. Comparison with
resistivity data of
La_1-x Sr_x MnO_3 as candidates for half-metals shows good agreement.Comment: 4 pages, including 5 eps figures. To be published in J. Phys. Soc.
Jpn. vol. 69 No. 7 (2000
Low-temperature electrical transport and double exchange in La(Pb,Ca)MnO
The resistivity in the ferromagnetic state of flux-grown
La_{2/3}(Pb,Ca)_{1/3}MnO_3 single crystals, measured in magnetic fields up to 7
T, reveals a strong quadratic temperature dependence at and above 50 K. At
lower temperatures, this contribution drops precipitously leaving the
resistivity essentially temperature independent below 20 K. The Seebeck
coefficient also reflects a change of regime at the same temperature. We
attribute this behavior to a cut-off of single magnon scattering processes at
long wavelengths due to the polarized bands of a double-exchange ferromagnet.Comment: 10 pages, TeX, 4 figures. Revised version. Submitte
Unusual behaviors in the transport properties of REFeP (RE: La, Ce, Pr, and Nd)
We have investigated the resistivity (), thermoelectric power (TEP) and
Hall coefficient () on high quality single crystals of
REFeP. TEP in CeFeP is extremely large (
0.5mV/K at 290K) with a peak of 0.75mV/K at around 65K. The Hall
mobility also shows a peak at 65K, suggesting carriers with heavy masses
developed at lower temperatures related with the f-hybridized band. Both Pr-
and Nd- systems exhibit an apparent increase of with decreasing
temperature far above their magnetic transition temperatures. In the same
temperature ranges, TEP exhibits unusually large absolute values of -50V/K
for PrFeP and -15V/K for NdFeP, respectively.
For PrFeP, such anomalous transport properties suggest an unusual
ground state, possibly related with the Quadrupolar Kondo effect.Comment: 5 pages, 8 figure
Spontaneous Magnetization of the O(3) Ferromagnet at Low Temperatures
We investigate the low-temperature behavior of ferromagnets with a
spontaneously broken symmetry O(3) O(2). The analysis is performed within
the perspective of nonrelativistic effective Lagrangians, where the dynamics of
the system is formulated in terms of Goldstone bosons. Unlike in a
Lorentz-invariant framework (chiral perturbation theory), where loop graphs are
suppressed by two powers of momentum, loops involving ferromagnetic spin waves
are suppressed by three momentum powers. The leading coefficients of the
low-temperature expansion for the partition function are calculated up to order
. In agreement with Dyson's pioneering microscopic analysis of the
cubic ferromagnet, we find that, in the spontaneous magnetization, the
magnon-magnon interaction starts manifesting itself only at order . The
striking difference with respect to the low-temperature properties of the O(3)
antiferromagnet is discussed from a unified point of view, relying on the
effective Lagrangian technique.Comment: 23 pages, 4 figure
Elliptic integral evaluations of Bessel moments
We record what is known about the closed forms for various Bessel function
moments arising in quantum field theory, condensed matter theory and other
parts of mathematical physics. More generally, we develop formulae for
integrals of products of six or fewer Bessel functions. In consequence, we are
able to discover and prove closed forms for with integers and , obtaining new results
for the even moments and . We also derive new closed forms
for the odd moments with and for with , relating the latter to Green functions on
hexagonal, diamond and cubic lattices. We conjecture the values of
, make substantial progress on the evaluation of ,
and and report more limited progress regarding
, and . In the process, we obtain 8
conjectural evaluations, each of which has been checked to 1200 decimal places.
One of these lies deep in 4- dimensional quantum field theory and two are
probably provable by delicate combinatorics. There remains a hard core of five
conjectures whose proofs would be most instructive, to mathematicians and
physicists alike.Comment: 51 pages, 1 Postscript figure, uses amsmath.sty, added reference
Exchange Interaction between Conduction Electrons and Magnetic Shell Electrons in Rare-Earth Metals
The interaction Hamiltonian for the Coulomb exchange effect between conduction electrons and magnetic-shell electrons in rare-earth metals was derived from first principles. The approximations under which the interaction can be represented by the product of electron and ion spin vectors are exhibited. (auth
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